AP: ‘Sense of History Eludes Bush in Radio Attack on Democrats’

Photo of Noel Sheppard.

On Sunday, America's leading wire service published an article that more closely resembled a Democrat talking points memo than anything I've seen in months.

In fact, it could have been written by the Democrat that did the response to President Bush's radio address on Saturday.

In a piece amazingly entitled "Sense of History Eludes Bush in Radio Attack on Democrats," after quoting some of the President's words concerning his desire that Congress pass a veterans spending bill before the Thanksgiving break, the Associated Press editorialized (h/t NBer saw the light, emphasis added throughout):

Story Continues Below Ad ↓

Bush's dig at Democrats didn't tell the whole story.

Congress has never delivered to Bush a veterans affairs spending bill by Veterans Day, even when Capitol Hill was run by Republicans. And even veterans' groups have been reluctant to criticize this year's Congress for the delay, because they are thankful for large budget increases already engineered by Democrats since they assumed the majority in January. They added $3.4 billion to the veterans' budget in February and $1.8 billion in May.

Amazing, wouldn't you agree? This could have been on Democratic National Committee letterhead rather than in a supposed news article.

On Veterans Day, no less.

After all, the President didn't say in his radio address that it was customary for such bills to be approved by Veterans Day. He just asked that this one would be:

Some of the Commission's recommendations require legislative action, such as updating the disability system to fully meet the needs of our wounded warriors. So my Administration has sent Congress a bill that would enact all the legislative steps recommended by the Commission. This is a good bill, our wounded warriors and their families are counting on it, and I urge Democrats and Republicans to come together to pass it as quickly as possible.

Congress can also meet its responsibility to our veterans by passing a clean Veterans Affairs appropriations bill. Unfortunately, Congressional leaders let the fiscal year end without passing this bill they know our veterans need. So I urged Congress to pass this bill by Veterans Day - and they still have failed to send me this vital legislation. The time to act is running out. There are now just four days left on the legislative calendar before Congress leaves town for their Thanksgiving break. The best way members of Congress can give thanks to our veterans is to send me a clean bill that I can sign into law.

You see anything in that text about it being customary for such spending to be approved by Veterans Day? No.

Instead, the President had asked that it should be, and was disappointed that it wasn't. Does that represent either an attack on Democrats, or an eluding of history?

Hardly.Yet, some history that the AP missed was what has happened to veterans spending since Bush took office in 2001.

According to the Office of Management and Budget, Veterans Affairs received $45 billion under former President Clinton's final budget as compared to $72 billion in fiscal 2007's which was created prior to the Democrat Congressional takeover. That's a 60 percent increase in six years.

By contrast, under Clinton, the VA budget went from $35 billion in FY 1993 to $45 billion in FY 2001, a 29 percent increase in eight years.

In fact, despite erroneous media assertions to the contrary, VA spending on both a real and percentage basis has increased more under President Bush than under any other president since Richard M. Nixon.

As such, it appears that history was actually eluding the AP in its Democrat talking points memo which disgracefully continued:

Democratic Rep. Joe Sestak of Pennsylvania touted the party's commitment to veterans.

"Democrats in Congress are working together with the president to see that veterans aging and young and their families receive the benefits they need and deserve," he said, delivering the weekly radio address for his party.

The veterans bill has gotten caught up in a larger battle between the White House and Congress over Democratic efforts to add about $23 billion for domestic programs to Bush's $933 billion proposal for all agency budgets passed by Congress each year.

Democrats had sought to combine the veterans spending measure with ones for education, health and job training programs to force passage of increases for the other programs. But Bush has insisted that the veterans money come to him in a stand-alone bill, and the veterans portion was stripped from the larger legislation this week, leaving that funding in limbo.

In the future, don't you think it would make more sense for the AP to just let the Democrat giving the response to Bush's radio address write its article about said address?

—Noel Sheppard is the Associate Editor of NewsBusters.


Comments Policy

All comments are owned by whoever posted them and are subject to our terms of use. They should not be assumed to represent the views of NewsBusters.

Viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Since "custom" has now

Since "custom" has now become "history," has the AP ever been concerned that a "sense of history" eludes former Presidents Clinton and Carter? You know, the one that says former Presidents don't go around the world trashing the current administration? Apparently, to the AP, the minor detail of a not-customary date is more important, since it can be used to criticize the President (It's never been done by Veterans' Day; how DARE he expect that this year!)

<sarc> And Mr. Sheppard, it's downright churlish of you to bring up President Clinton's stingy-in-comparison budgets to make Bush's look good. Leave the past in the past and just let them do their Bush-bashing unimpeded.

MB

MB,

You're right, even if sarcastically. I'm waiting to get bashed all over the Internet for bringing up Clinton's record in order to defend Bush's.

However, I have found it disgusting how the media and the Dems have bashed Bush over VA spending when his record is the best in this regard since Nixon.

Yet, if you took a poll, I'd bet the majority of respondents would say that Bush has actually CUT VA spending!!! ns

Noel _ approvingly

Noel, approvingly noting that the analysis to the Clinton budget is indeed a fair shot. With our MSM never missing an oportuninity to lambast, usually incorectly as they can't seem to get the facts right, Reagan (any Repbulican), etc.,  how can it not be fair to put out the facts from the other side.

You might remember the personal story, of my daughter, then in 9th grade, when her teacher went on a rant (in red ink on a current event assignment), stating that "the "idiot" Bush had slashed Medicaid spending, causing millions of poor people to live through untold suffering. In fact, as my daughter then presented to him a very similar comparison. Spending under Bush on Medicaid had increased much faster than it did under Clinton. (ah, part of the deficit - social spending under Bush). 

That silly fellow, now w/o a job (Teachers - go ahead - write it down in ink).

Go Gary!

I hope you got the fool fired, truly. 

David Gregory, do you know which damn network you lie for? ~ Uncle Jimbo, @Blackfive

 

Why?

...and people wonder why I hold teachers in such low regard, and why I voted against the $805 million Houston ISD bond package (the damn thing passed, sadly). 

Res tantum valet quantum vendi potest.

I read this article

I read this article yesterday and had steam coming out my ears. I'm glad you exposed the blatant bias so effectively on this.

Headlines

Noel,

Not that I'm defending the AP (how could I with the slant of the article?), but the asinine headline, "Sense of history eludes Bush in radio attack on Democrats" was probably an add-on by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.  The link you have shows the headline, as does their Sunday print edition (yes, people still buy it - fewer and fewer each day).  Here's another link that shows another headline:

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BUSH?SITE=MOSTP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

The story's the same, however.

Thanks for the additional research behind the "facts" contained in the article.

 

"There is a tendency for the world to say to America, 'the big problems of the world are yours, you go and sort them out,' and then to worry when America wants to sort them out." - Tony Blair

Noel, What gets me is the

Noel,

What gets me is the VA has been a mess for decades. But now after we are at war its all Bush's fault about the problems at the VA. At least President Bush recognizes there are probems and wants to take steps to start correcting the shortfalls.The truth about this issue has nothing to do with our wounded heros for the Democrats and their cult anti-war following. The vets are just another tool to make an anti war message. They are pawns in their eyes. Once all the troops come home the left will forget all the wounded vets.

Veteran

As a Veteran and a person active in a Veterans organization, the VA is not as big a mess as potrayed by the liberals and the media. Walter Reed is an Army hospital, not a VA hospital. The General incharge was removed. His career is over. The problem now is playing catch up in  providing care for those Veterans  from Iraq and Afganistan. One of the things that you do not here about are the many, many clinics that are now open for the Veterans in smaller cities.

One thing that liberals do not understand about us is this. We do not sit around all day  telling war stories waiting on the government to do something for us.

"One thing that liberals do

"One thing that liberals do not understand about us is this. We do not sit around all day  telling war stories waiting on the government to do something for us."

Waiting for the government to do something for them is strictly the bailiwick of the most faithful liberal voting blocks - those on the taxpayers' dime and not working.

People in the real world know what you veterans have done for us and are eternally grateful.

My father-in-law was in Korea.  He has never gone looking for a handout and worked hard every day in his life.  It was only in the past seven years that my wife and I were able to financially help him so he could retire.  Otherwise, he'd still be working.

His stories were pretty amazing.  He talked nonchalantly about transiting the Panama Canal and other experiences, which were quite exotic for someone growing up in very rural southeast Missouri during the Depression.

"There is a tendency for the world to say to America, 'the big problems of the world are yours, you go and sort them out,' and then to worry when America wants to sort them out." - Tony Blair

So it's not bad enough that

So it's not bad enough that the AP "news" story is loaded with opinion, but the SLD editorializes in its headline. Nice.

Hmm, this sounds like

Hmm, this sounds like it was the work of Jennifer Loven.

I wonder why was it unsigned.

SMG

 

 

 

 

Writer

Deb Riechmann, according to the link I posted above.

The writers for the AP are the truly historically challenged.

For the liberals at the Ass. Press to be critical of anyone else's "sense of history" is utterly hysterical.

With the possible exception of liberal academia, no group since the regime of the Hitlerites has done more to twist, manipulate, "revise" and ignore history than have the members of the liberal MSM.